This September The Glass Painter’s Daughter has been reprinted with a lovely new cover. It has also been chosen by the Curtis Brown Book Group as its book of the month. Here you can find my guest blog about how I came to write the book. It all started one rainy night when I was walking through the wet backstreets of Westminster…» Continue Reading

This is the last of seven daily blogs in which I have tried to give you A Week in Paris, to celebrate the publication of my novel. Some of you might feel inspired to continue the experience, so I thought that I should use it to share with you some of my favourite books about…» Continue Reading

From Daphne du Maurier to Mary Wesley, the coves and headlands of Cornwall have provided the setting for some of fiction’s most stirring melodramas. Rachel Hore revisits Camomile Lawn territory with a classic wartime saga tracing the fortunes of an old West Country family swept up in the horrors of the Blitz. When young photographer…» Continue Reading

We have met to discuss [Hore’s] fourth novel, A Place of Secrets. Like the others, it is an up-market romance split between interlinked stories set in the present day and the past – in this case, the 18th century. Jude, a valuer for a modern-day London auction house, is called to a remote part of…» Continue Reading

When Lucy delves into her father’s past to find out why he was particularly interested in a certain man whose story he was never able to uncover, she meets a woman who holds the answers and peels back the layers of her life and reveals to Lucy hidden truths and a story rich in WWII…» Continue Reading

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